UW Student from Burns Finds Community, Career Direction in Environmental Science
Published April 03, 2026

Hope Langseth
Growing up in Burns, a tight-knit Laramie County community of 300, Hope Langseth learned
the value of looking out for one another.
“There’s a big sense of community there,” Langseth says. “Everybody knows everybody
and, in Burns, we use it for the better. Everyone’s there for everyone when they need
it.”
Now a junior studying environmental systems science and geographic information science
and technology at the University of Wyoming’s Haub School of Environment and Natural
Resources, Langseth is finding that same sense of community in her academic program
while preparing for a career in environmental science.
Asked to describe the program in three words, Langseth chose: interdisciplinarity,
connection and forward-thinking. The program’s required internship component has been
particularly valuable for her career preparation. She has had professional internships
with Wyoming State Parks and Cultural Resources and the Wyoming Department of Environmental
Quality.
“I think it’s a great way for you to use your skills, but also to see if this is really
what you want to do and what your future career could be like,” she says.
Beyond academics, Langseth credits the Haub School’s career services team for shaping
her professional development.
“The career services team is just absolutely amazing,” she says. “They helped me so
much with finding internships and making decisions, prioritizing what I need as a
person, even outside of my career.”
Three Decades of Impact
UW’s Haub School prepares the next generation of natural resource professionals while
serving Wyoming’s wild and working lands and communities. With 1,275 alumni (1996-2025),
many working across the state in government, private industry, nonprofits and education,
the school offers six undergraduate and seven graduate programs integrating science,
policy, law, economics and community engagement.
The school brings about $2 million annually in research funding to Wyoming while supporting
communities through four dedicated centers and institutes. Recent milestones include
a $5 million gift from Jay and Karen Kemmerer in 2025 to establish the Wyoming Outdoor
Recreation, Tourism and Hospitality (WORTH) Institute, supporting the state’s second-largest
industry.
Haub School programs, including the Wyoming Conservation Corps, have trained more
than 150 young adults and veterans since 2021, while the Biodiversity Institute connects
people of all ages to Wyoming’s wildlife through 40-plus annual programs reaching
over 3,500 participants statewide. The school’s Ruckelshaus Institute facilitates
collaborative, long-term solutions to natural resource challenges, offers professional
workforce development, and publishes the award-winning Western Confluence magazine,
reaching nearly 4,000 readers across the state. Learn more at www.uwyo.edu/haub.
Additionally, the Haub School’s Tomé Scholars to Fellows Program -- established in 2021 through a major gift from UW alumni Carol and Ramon Tomé -- provides exceptional students with full-ride, four-year scholarships and experiential learning opportunities to address complex environmental challenges. Recent expanded support from the Tomé Foundation has doubled the number of scholars on campus. Learn more at www.bit.ly/tomescholars.
